Kaiser Permanente Bernard J Tyson School of Medicine Announces New Assistant Dean for Community Engagement apnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from apnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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The award will be presented virtually during the 40th annual Governor s Arts Awards, a hybrid event this year because of the coronavirus pandemic, on Friday, March 26. The Governor s Arts Awards will be celebrated at locations throughout the state. Details will be announced.
The Shelley Award is named for former Arizona Commission on the Arts Executive Director Shelley Cohn, who served in that role for 21 years before retiring in 2005. The Shelley Award has been presented since 2006 to an Arizona individual who has advanced Arizona arts and culture through strategic and innovative work to create or support public policy beneficial to the arts.
Where Does Racial Generational Trauma Come From, And Can It Be Stopped?
On the latest episode of
Basic Black, host Callie Crossley is joined by four experts to look at racial generational trauma and how issues are passed down from one generation to the next. The result can have far-reaching implications, such as affecting one’s health, livelihood, and relationships. What can be done to recognize, address and combat it?
Joining the panel discussion are guests Gary Bailey, DHL, MSW, ACSW, from the Simmons University School of Social Work; Charles Daniels Jr., Ph.D., therapist and CEO of Father’s Uplift; C. Shawn McGuffey, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Sociology and Director of African & African Diaspora Studies at Boston College; and Kim McLarin, Associate Professor & Graduate Program Director for the Department of Writing, Literature & Publishing at Emerson College.
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IMAGE: Terri H. Lipman, PhD, CRNP, FAAN, the Miriam Stirl Endowed Term Professor of Nutrition, Professor of Nursing of Children, and Assistant Dean for Community Engagement at the University of Pennsylvania. view more
Credit: Penn Nursing
PHILADELPHIA, PA (January 22, 2021) - Advancements in diabetes technology have improved quality of life and glycemic control in children with type 1 diabetes. However, data show that a subset of children is being left behind. Those from low-income families and non-Hispanic Black (NHB) children are not experiencing benefits associated with technological advances, and are at higher risk for diabetes complications and adverse outcomes through ongoing poor glycemic control.